I'm pretty sure they are the axes. The X axis is the horizontal line and the Y axis is the vertical
The axes of coordinate planes intersect at the point of origin.
Because that is where the x and y axes intersect at right angles
That point, (0,0) is called the origin
The origin is where the two intersect. This is where both number lines are 0.
They are the horizontal x axis and the vertical y axis that are perpendicular to each other on the Cartesian plane whereas the point of origin is at (0, 0)
The simplest answer is y = 0 and x = 0.
origin
Its called an origin.
The origin.
A grid with a horizontal axis and a vertical axis that intersect at a point is called a Cartesian coordinate system. The axes are perpendicular to each other and therefore form four right angles at the point at which they intersect, known as the origin.
Yes and they are the x and y axes of the Cartesian coordinate plane and they intersect at the point of origin which is at (0, 0)
The axes of coordinate planes intersect at the point of origin.
As you remember from pre-algebra a coordinate plane is a two-dimensional number line where the vertical line is called the y-axis and the horizontal is called the x-axis. These lines are perpendicular and intersect at their zero points. This point is called the origin.
The horizontal line is the x axis and the vertical line is the y axis both axes are perpendicular to each other and intersect at the origin which is (0, 0)
Because that is where the x and y axes intersect at right angles
A coordinate graph has two perpendicular lines, or axes, labeled with number and called number lines. The horizontal axis is called the x-axis. The vertical axis is called the y-axis. The point where the x-axis and y-axis intersect is called the origin. I'm doing this in school now!
That point, (0,0) is called the origin